Nicaragua : Electricity Sector Statistics

Nicaragua : Electricity Sector Statistics

Indicator NameValue
Electricity production (kWh)3,659,000,000
Electricity production from coal sources (kWh)0
Electricity production from natural gas sources (kWh)0
Electricity production from nuclear sources (kWh)0
Electricity production from renewable sources (kWh)1,354,000,000
Electricity production from hydroelectric sources (kWh)504,000,000
Electricity production from renewable sources, excluding hydroelectric (kWh)850,000,000
Electricity production from oil sources (kWh)2,305,000,000
Formulas Electricity production = Electricity production from coal sources + Electricity production from natural gas sources + Electricity production from nuclear sources + Electricity production from renewable sources + Electricity production from oil sources

Electricity production from renewable sources = Electricity production from hydroelectric sources + Electricity production from renewable sources, excluding hydroelectric

YearElectric power consumption (kWh)
19901,278,000,000
19911,277,000,000
19921,318,000,000
19931,301,000,000
19941,271,000,000
19951,354,000,000
19961,475,000,000
19971,689,000,000
19981,677,000,000
19991,641,000,000
20001,748,000,000
20011,768,000,000
20021,839,000,000
20031,944,000,000
20042,106,000,000
20052,243,000,000
20062,342,000,000
20072,563,000,000
20082,674,000,000
20092,735,000,000
20102,739,000,000
YearElectric power consumption (kWh per capita)
1990309
1991301
1992304
1993292
1994279
1995291
1996310
1997348
1998340
1999327
2000343
2001342
2002350
2003366
2004391
2005411
2006424
2007458
2008472
2009476
2010470
Electricity production (kWh)Electricity production is measured at the terminals of all alternator sets in a station. In addition to hydropower, coal, oil, gas, and nuclear power generation, it covers generation by geothermal, solar, wind, and tide and wave energy, as well as that from combustible renewables and waste. Production includes the output of electricity plants that are designed to produce electricity only as well as that of combined heat and power plants.
Electricity production from coal sources (kWh)Sources of electricity refer to the inputs used to generate electricity. Coal refers to all coal and brown coal, both primary (including hard coal and lignite-brown coal) and derived fuels (including patent fuel, coke oven coke, gas coke, coke oven gas, and blast furnace gas). Peat is also included in this category.
Electricity production from natural gas sources (kWh)Sources of electricity refer to the inputs used to generate electricity. Gas refers to natural gas but excludes natural gas liquids.
Electricity production from nuclear sources (kWh)Sources of electricity refer to the inputs used to generate electricity. Nuclear power refers to electricity produced by nuclear power plants.
Electricity production from renewable sources (kWh)Electricity production from renewable sources includes hydropower, geothermal, solar, tides, wind, biomass, and biofuels.
Electricity production from oil sources (kWh)Sources of electricity refer to the inputs used to generate electricity. Oil refers to crude oil and petroleum products.
Electricity production from hydroelectric sources (kWh)Sources of electricity refer to the inputs used to generate electricity. Hydropower refers to electricity produced by hydroelectric power plants.
Electricity production from renewable sources, excluding hydroelectric (kWh)Electricity production from renewable sources, excluding hydroelectric, includes geothermal, solar, tides, wind, biomass, and biofuels.
Electric power consumption (kWh)Electric power consumption measures the production of power plants and combined heat and power plants less transmission, distribution, and transformation losses and own use by heat and power plants.
Electric power consumption (kWh per capita)Electric power consumption measures the production of power plants and combined heat and power plants less transmission, distribution, and transformation losses and own use by heat and power plants.
Data Source: Worldbank, World Development Indicators